Editorial
Front Page - Friday, October 29, 2010
The Bookworm
“Zapped” by Ann Louise Gittleman $25.99 / $29.99 Canada 272 pages
By Terri Schlichenmeyer
You always set two alarms.
It’s a habit you got into while in college, and it’s served you well. The smell of coffee might wake you (an automatic coffee maker is a lifesaver!) but there’s no sense in risking things.
But what about all the other risks you take in your life? Merely shutting off the alarm, making toast, taking a shower, even working can be bad for your health, as you’ll see in the new book “Zapped” by Ann Louise Gittleman.
Take a look around and count the number of electronic devices in the room you’re occupying. Chances are that you’ve got more electronic equipment than you had five years ago. Surely, you own more electronics than you had two decades ago.
And while you probably think you can’t live without your Smartphone, coffeemaker, TV, radio, DVD player, alarm clock, electric shaver, or cordless phone, Gittleman says it’s possible that you can’t live with them, either.
Because it takes electricity to move muscles and because our brains contain a bit of magnetic substance, we are, basically, walking electromagnetic machines. The problem is that the devices we live with today are bombarding us with unnatural magnetic fields and emissions that are overloading our bodies and attacking our immune systems. Some of them could make us sick. Some could be deadly.
Cell phones may cause cancer, despite recent assurances. “Dirty electricity” from the neighborhood may be wreaking havoc on your health. Sleeping near an electrical outlet may be dangerous, and ceiling fans are a big no-no. Even lounging on the sofa can be dangerous, if it’s placed against a wall.
Gittleman says that electricity and radiation, while undoubtedly useful and necessary parts of civilization, are causing an epidemic in fatigue, headaches, autoimmune disorders, nausea, respiratory problems, digestive disorders, and allergies when they escape their confines – which they’re doing constantly.
So what can you do?
Keep your cell phone as far away as possible from your body. If you must talk on it, switch sides often. Turn off wireless routers when not in use; they radiate for over 500 feet. Keep your laptop off your lap. Talk to an expert about the lighting in your surroundings. Pay attention to any towers or electrical generators nearby.
Because it’s filled with an awful lot of ‘new-agey,’ far-fetched-sounding information, “Zapped” is one of those books that’s easy to scoff at. But read awhile, and what you’ll learn worms its way into believability until everything makes chilling sense.
Gittleman plugs in to the latest research to warn her readers about the dangers of merely existing in today’s society, and she offers tips to minimize any danger you may face in your day-to-day life. If you want to go full-force in protecting yourself, you’ll also find recipes to help.
If you can’t live without cell phone or computer, and if you can’t wait for the latest gadget to be released, you owe it to yourself to read this book. What you’ll learn in “Zapped” may make you doubly alarmed.
The Bookworm is Terri Schli-chenmeyer. Terri has been reading since she was three years old and she never goes anywhere without a book. She lives on a hill in Wisconsin with two dogs and 12,000 books.
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